|
Mar
Ex Member
|
Not just 14 years ago were patients being told surgery was not an option, still to this day many doctors in the medical community are still saying not to have surgery because it is too risky or they say, let’s “wait and see” if you have another stroke. We now know this is NOT the path to take. This is a successfully treatable disease in most cases. They are not bad doctors, it’s just that they are not educated enough about MM “the disease itself”, which makes the "risk" more about their LACK of knowledge of MM, rather than an actual risk to the patient, and what’s important to know is, surgical management is the ONLY treatment for MMD.
We don’t know your Mom’s specifics to be able to say if surgery is best for her at this point or not, but we do know we see so many MM patients told the same exact thing as your Mom all the time, and yet when they sought a MM specialist or MM experienced neurosurgeon and their surgery was successful, they now live a better quality of life. We don’t know the damage your Mom suffered, but we do know that your Mom right now is not getting the proper blood supply to her brain, so therefore she will continue to decline, stroke or hemorrhage anyway without surgery. This is a progressive disease. So, the posts you read suggest getting a second opinion from a MM specialist, one who deals with this rare disease on a daily basis, for his expert opinion. What could you lose? It could only help you know in all good conscience whether you’re on the right tract or whether there is a chance at quality life for your Mom. It’s a call for a MM specialist to make, IMO.
Dr. Steinberg, a leading MM specialist from Stanford, CA., has done over 700 successful MM surgeries, with over a 95% success rate. If you could get your Mom’s most recent films and overnight them to him, then he would call you with his expert opinion. The only cost being the postage. No one is saying surgery, you’d simply be getting his expert opinion.
I can tell you about so many cases where MM patients were literally sent home to die with no hope, yet they sought a MM specialist and he did their surgeries when no one else would, and now you wouldn’t even know they had MM or brain surgery. It’s amazing what your brain can repair once you get the proper blood supply to it.
Lore gave you excellent advice and knows what she's talking about. Her brother was sent home to die. He was actually gray in color and looked like death, but she fought like none I ever saw before to get him to a MM specialist, and now when I see Kevin at the reunions, we have a beer together and it amazes me he’s alive and doing so good.
In my family’s case, my 20 year old niece suffered four massive strokes; she was in a coma, on a feeding tube, paralyzed, incontinent, etc and fighting for her life. Thank God I found this website. DJ told us to get a second opinion from Dr. Steinberg. So we overnighted a copy of her films (MRI/MRA & Angiogram) for his expert opinion, and he called us the very next day. He said she needed surgery immediately, she had a severe blockage on both sides of her brain, so we had her medically air lifted from Philly to CA and Dr. Steinberg saved her life. What did we have to lose; she was going to only get worse rather than better anyway. Sure, the strokes did permanent damage, don’t get me wrong, but she now can walk and talk, and lives a 100% better quality of life, now that the surgeries provided her with the proper oxygen and nutrients that her brain so desperately needed.
Anyone who has had successful surgeries had to fight to get that success in some way or another, due to the lack of MM experience out there. Remember you are dealing with a rare disease, so you need an experienced neurosurgeon for any chance of success. Your Mom can’t do it; she needs a proactive advocate to fight for her to even get that chance.
I will keep you all in my thoughts and prayers.
Mar
|